Sunday, August 29, 2010

the crust of a planet - part one

whenever I look down--straight down if that were possible--
I see all we humans have done to the landscape and our infrastructure
we build to make life optimal or efficient or easy or familiar.

but what strikes me
is not that we are tearing up the soil
or ripping off rings of bark

nor is it that we're becoming advanced
or that our civilization's blueprint is spelled out in roads.

what strikes me
is that we're all children
digging holes to China and not getting very far
before we give up and try again a little further along.

and that we're clawing at our planet to make it a reflection
of ourselves, but our fingernails are still only in the varnish.

Friday, August 27, 2010

the crust of a planet - part two

along the wooded hills of the South we carve long corridors
for our power lines, the grassy pencil marks through the geography,
the graphite that links our spaced cultures.

electricity takes the shortest distance, but highways wander
at an engineer's whim and follow hillsides for the view.

between Purcell and Lexington, 77 is a bridge
cleaner than the mud and river it spans, and riding its correct latitude.

and we fight with nature to prove there are four cardinal directions
but water doesn't mind direction, only height and temperature.
we are laying our graph paper over ink blots and wax drops.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

the crust of a planet - part three

but I've forgotten two things:

we aren't foreign and our metropolises are spiderwebs or cobwebs,
a creation of nature and in turn part of the natural world.
we like to claim we're apart from it like a tattoo is foreign
to the complex biology underneath

or like the printed word doesn't interact with the cells
that were pulped and dried and bound up underneath.
but life and the inanimate are only a series of steps apart.

the other is that I've only been looking down.

the clouds are a part of our earth's crust,
they have only escaped upward for a turn.
and our engines send plumes, which I contend isn't poison
but oil paint that's difficult to manage.

Friday, August 20, 2010

take time

Take this time for yourself, but to be healed.
I think you are complex with nothing on and nothing on your mind.
You are a colorful universe puzzle like an apartment complex.